Skip to main content

Another partner backs out of Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency

Yet another company that signed on as a partner in Facebook’s proposed cryptocurrency known as Libra has backed out of the association. The British telecommunications operator Vodafone announced its departure from Facebook’s Libra Association on Tuesday, Coindesk reports. In total, eight companies have now backed out of the Libra partnership. 

Recommended Videos

“We can confirm that Vodafone is no longer a member of the Libra Association. Although the makeup of the Association members may change over time, the design of Libra’s governance and technology ensures the Libra payment system will remain resilient,” the Libra Association said in a statement. “The Association is continuing the work to achieve a safe, transparent, and consumer-friendly implementation of the Libra payment system.”

Facebook Libra
Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

Vodafone operates in 26 countries and offers mobile, broadband, and TV services, as well as cloud and security products. It joins other companies like PayPal, Visa, Mastercard, eBay, Stripe, and Argentine e-commerce giant Mercado Pago that had already pulled out of the project. 

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Vodafone has yet to respond to our request for comment on its departure from Libra. 

Facebook’s Libra was announced last June and was projected to be ready by this year. However, the program has been met with much criticism. 

Lawmakers have largely come out against the cryptocurrency, arguing that Facebook has been irresponsible with user data and shouldn’t be allowed to have its own currency. President Donald Trump has also attacked the plan, saying he’s not a fan of the idea.

One of the main criticisms of Facebook’s proposed Libra system is related to privacy issues, which the social media network had its fair share of those in the past.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified before Congress in October about Libra, defending the idea but acknowledging the struggles left to overcome. 

“I understand we’re not the ideal messenger right now. We’ve faced a lot of issues over the past few years, and I’m sure people wish it was anyone but Facebook putting this idea forward,” he said in his testimony.

Digital Trends reached out to Facebook to comment on Vodafone’s departure, and what the next steps are for Libra, including a launch date. We’ll update this story once we hear back. 

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Microsoft is shuttering Mixer as it partners with Facebook Gaming
microsoft shuts down mixer facebook gaming fbgmixer inline1

Microsoft announced it will shutter its Mixer streaming service on July 22 and start transitioning the service's content producers and users to Facebook Gaming. When Mixer shuts down, all of Mixer's sites and apps will redirect to their new homes on Facebook Gaming, the company said on Monday.

The surprise move comes as Microsoft's Mixer failed to gain a footing in the increasingly crowded game-streaming business dominated by Amazon's Twitch and YouTube. Microsoft said the agreement is "a key part of a broader effort that Xbox and Facebook Gaming are embarking on, bringing new experiences and opportunities to Facebook."

Read more
Facebook rebrands its cryptocurrency wallet as Novi
facebook rebrands cryptocurrency wallet as novi

Facebook’s digital wallet has a new name: Novi.

The social media giant announced on Tuesday that Calibra, which will send and hold Libra, Facebook's proposed cryptocurrency, has been rebranded.

Read more
Microsoft invention could mine cryptocurrency by reading brain waves
Cognitive Dissonance

Would you accept cryptocurrency as a reward for watching ads? How about if you had to prove you had watched said ads by having your brain waves analyzed? It might sound a bit crazy, but it’s an idea Microsoft lays out in a new patent application titled “Cryptocurrency System Using Body Activity Data.”

Filed in September 2018, but only recently published by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and highlighted by PC Magazine, the application describes a method of how “brain wave or body heat emitted from the user when the user performs the task provided by an information service provider, such as viewing an advertisement or using certain internet services, can be used in the mining process.”

Read more